Applying your same argument, one could conclude nuclear has no chance, since there is limited capacity to make nuclear power plants, and those making them have been losing large amounts of money. And unlike solar, there are not good experience effects there.
Combustion turbines have also shown economic trouble lately. GE's troubles stem in part from betting on that just before demand started collapsing.
Who says solar will be more practical than fusion, you ask? Extrapolating historical learning curves, the levelized cost of solar will drop to $0.01/kWh or so by the time the world transitions to mostly solar, especially in the sunniest areas. This is vastly lower than the projected cost of energy from fusion. If you say fusion will show experience effects too, then I'll note that fusion is most like fission, and fission (as I mentioned above) has not shown such effects, probably due to the inherent complexity and long construction time scales.
An ultimate low cost for solar will excuse many sins of variability and seasonality, allowing wasteful overinstallation and inefficient long term storage.